Two dozen businesses and restaurants in downtown Hartford will be offering holiday discounts and giveaways this weekend as part of national Small Business Saturday, officials said.

Participants of the second annual Saturday event, coordinated by the U.S. Small Business Administration's Regional Administrator for New England, include Hartford Prints, The Greenway Market, City Steam Brewery, Black-Eyed Sally's, Hartford Stage, Barnes & Noble bookstore, Connecticut Science Center and others.

Shoppers are urged to start at the welcome station at retailer Morneault's Stackpole Moore Tyron at 242 Trumbull St. to receive maps of participating businesses and deals.

The city's parking overseer, the Hartford Parking Authority (HPA), is also providing free parking for visitors who mention "SBS" at lots on the east side of Main Street between Morgan Street and Trumbull Street.

HPA is also extending free parking hours to promote the ninth annual Winterfest Hartford, which is opening a free, community skating rink in Bushnell Park on Friday.

Additional free parking is available after 5 p.m. at the state's parking lots on West Street and along Capitol Avenue, giving visitors easy access to Bushnell Park.

As always, on-street parking is free after 6 p.m. on weeknights and all day on weekends.

Black Friday

The rest of Greater Hartford's retailers are prepping for what is expected to be a busy Black Friday and holiday shopping season.

A survey by Deloitte says over 70 percent of holiday shoppers will turn out for Black Friday sales this year, while buyers are expected to spend 4.1 percent more on average than they did in 2017, according to the National Retail Federation and Prosper Insights & Analytics.

That's good news for Sears Holdings, which is trying to emerge from bankruptcy after recently announcing it will close 29 Sears stores and 11 Kmart locations. The closures add onto nearly 200 locations the retailer previously said it would shutter in the coming months.

Meantime, big retailers like Target, Walmart, Best Buy and Amazon are looking to seize the first holiday shopping season in decades without Toys 'R' Us, which closed after 70 years in operation this year, leaving behind $10.5 billion in annual sales.